部落国家关系的“最致命敌人”模式已经过时

M. Fletcher
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引用次数: 9

摘要

州政府长期以来一直被描述为印第安人和印第安部落的“最致命的敌人”,即使现在的首席大法官罗伯茨在1997年最高法院的简报中推翻了这一描述,将印第安部落描述为肇事者-州政府的“死敌”。由这种描述产生的宪法普通法规则禁止各州在没有国会同意的情况下与印第安部落接触。但这种关于部落与国家关系的观点可以追溯到美国宪法学和印第安事务的前100年,当时各州和印第安部落经常发生可怕的种族灭绝暴力。部落国家关系的“死敌”模式早已过时,并转变为政治和法律纠纷。在诉讼之外,这些争端通常通过政府间协议解决。然而,由“最致命的敌人”模式产生的明线规则对和平的部落国家关系的发展起着障碍作用。这篇短文主张摒弃“最致命的敌人”模式。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Retiring the 'Deadliest Enemies' Model of Tribal-State Relations
State governments have long been described as the "deadliest enemies" of Indian people and Indian tribes, even with now-Chief Justice Roberts famously reversing the description in a 1997 Supreme Court brief to describe Indian tribes as the perpetrator - the "dead[ly] enemies" of states. The Constitutional common law rule resulting from this description prevents states from engaging with Indian tribes absent Congressional consent. But this view of tribal-state relations dates back to the first 100 years of American Constitutional jurisprudence and Indian affairs, when states and Indian tribes engaged in oft-horrific and genocidal violence. The "deadliest enemies" model of tribal-state relations has long passed and transformed into political and legal disputes. Outside of litigation, these disputes often are resolved via intergovernmental agreement. However, the bright-line rule resulting from the "deadliest enemies" model operates as a barrier to the development of peaceable tribal-state relationships. This short Essay argues for the retirement of the "deadliest enemies" model.
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